In an article in the February 1977 issue of Word Ways, I asserted that all English words and names, without exception, were logologically interesting. In response to that article, I was challenged to find something of logological interest in the word PSEUDOFEVERISHLY
The Oxford English Dictionary defines logology as the science of word and Dmitri Borgmann playfull...
In exploring the recreational byways of the English language, the most important tool of the logolog...
Logopoeia (a coined word meaning \u27word-coining\u27) is a natural activity of English-language spe...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
The article Words, Non-words, Nonce Words in the May 1971 Word Ways touched briefly on coined word...
Three Word Ways articles have been written by Dmitri Borgmann (February and May 1977) and Pamela Bra...
Of perennial interest to Word Ways readers are very long English words - words of 27 or more letters...
For the dedicated logologist, it has always been an article of faith that every English word and nam...
A recent word ways article by Philip M. Cohen (May, 1980) enunciates a new logological concept. For ...
Towering above all other features of the logological landscape are palindromes. Enveloped in a majes...
It was Dmitri Borgmann who put the word logology into circulation. Before Language on Vacation, hi...
In the August 1972 issue of Word Ways, Darryl H. Francis shook the world of logology to its very fou...
Funny haha arguably, funny peculiar inarguably. No legit dictionary would touch these newords. So wh...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
What makes a word interesting? I ask this rhetorically, not inviting specific response. One has only...
The Oxford English Dictionary defines logology as the science of word and Dmitri Borgmann playfull...
In exploring the recreational byways of the English language, the most important tool of the logolog...
Logopoeia (a coined word meaning \u27word-coining\u27) is a natural activity of English-language spe...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
The article Words, Non-words, Nonce Words in the May 1971 Word Ways touched briefly on coined word...
Three Word Ways articles have been written by Dmitri Borgmann (February and May 1977) and Pamela Bra...
Of perennial interest to Word Ways readers are very long English words - words of 27 or more letters...
For the dedicated logologist, it has always been an article of faith that every English word and nam...
A recent word ways article by Philip M. Cohen (May, 1980) enunciates a new logological concept. For ...
Towering above all other features of the logological landscape are palindromes. Enveloped in a majes...
It was Dmitri Borgmann who put the word logology into circulation. Before Language on Vacation, hi...
In the August 1972 issue of Word Ways, Darryl H. Francis shook the world of logology to its very fou...
Funny haha arguably, funny peculiar inarguably. No legit dictionary would touch these newords. So wh...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
What makes a word interesting? I ask this rhetorically, not inviting specific response. One has only...
The Oxford English Dictionary defines logology as the science of word and Dmitri Borgmann playfull...
In exploring the recreational byways of the English language, the most important tool of the logolog...
Logopoeia (a coined word meaning \u27word-coining\u27) is a natural activity of English-language spe...